I would agree on your general view of the nativity.
The Bible sets it out quite plainly.
Although a possibility, it remains a personal opinion about the star sent by the devil.
It is said that the Maggi's were descendants of those who studied under Daniel.
Said by whom? Those trying to justify the celebration of Christmas?
Any who studied under Daniel would reject what God condemns...and we know what happens in succeeding generations...look at Israel....once God corrected them, it was the succeeding generations who wandered off into false worship again. If this was the case with the Magi, then they wandered back to their Babylonian roots.
When God warned the Israelites about not adopting the practices of the Canaanites when they took possession of the Promised Land, he specifically mentioned astrology and magic as things that were abhorrent to him. (Deuteronomy 18:9-12)
It was only the Magi who saw the star. The shepherds were Jewish and visited by angels.
Do you think God revealed this most important information to those whose worship he despised?
I think that the reason they were sent was that:
- God knew that Herod was going to try to kill the child (His birth was already notorious)
- God knew that Joseph and family were going to need some gold to live in Egypt.
- It fulfilled scripture.
If the star was sent by God then he is directly responsible for the murder of all those infants.....can that be true?
There is only that one indication of the fact that the Magi did not visit the stable.....that Jesus was living in a house and was possibly two years old by the time they arrived. It doesn't say where Mary and Joseph were specifically living at the time, only that the star led them until it "came to a stop" over the house where Jesus was.
If the star could be so specific, then why lead the Magi to Herod? Since Mary and Joseph appear to be the only ones, (save for those few to whom God revealed it) who knew who and where this child was. Herod had to consult both the astrologers and the priests to find out his information.
Another reason why it is not possible for the Magi to have visited the newborn Jesus is that the mandatory sacrifice they presented at the Temple with the birth of a newborn (8 days old) was the offering of the poor...two turtle doves......if they had gold, then their offering would have reflected that.
If it fulfills scripture, that doesn't mean that God caused it, but simply that he foretold what was already in the future.....that is what prophesy is.....history written in advance.
So I would hold to the position that it wasn't sent by the devil.
That is up to you of course....but 2 Corinthians 6:14-18 tells us point blank that we cannot fuse the truth with lies and still be accepted as God's "sons and daughters". The devil is an "angel of light" when he needs to be...so, shouldn't we be careful about what we accept and justify because we like it?
Does God like it?...that's the most important question, surely?